What Valencia actually looks, feels, and costs like for someone considering moving. Neighbourhoods, climate, transport, healthcare, safety, and the practical scaffolding — every figure sourced.
Country
Spain
Europe
Population
2,587,000
metro · 2024
Area
1,462 km²
Elevation
15 m
city centre
Time zone
Europe/Madrid
Currency
EUR
Airport
VLC · Valencia Airport
Metro
10 metro lines · tram network
Walkability
●●●●●
editorial score · 1–5
Bike friendliness
●●●●○
editorial score · 1–5
Primary language
Spanish and Valencian (a variety of Catalan) official. English common in tech and digital-nomad communities.
Valencia is a city of 2,587,000 people in Spain (Europe). It is one of Spain's largest urban centres. The main international airport is VLC (Valencia Airport). The metro system has 10 lines, alongside a tram network. As part of the EU and the Schengen area, Spain permits internal-EU freedom of movement for qualifying citizens.
A one-bedroom city-centre apartment runs approximately €950 per month. Monthly groceries for one person run approximately €245. A monthly public-transport pass costs €35. Across the 100 cities Meridian tracks, Valencia ranks 36th overall on combined monthly essentials — in the middle of the range.
Valencia's climate is mediterranean — August is typically the warmest month with average highs around 32°C, while January is the coldest with average lows near 7°C. Annual rainfall totals approximately 484mm, wettest in October.
Cost of living
Cost of living
Total monthly essentials: approximately €1,360/month EUR-equivalent for a single person in a 1-bedroom flat (rent + utilities + groceries + transit). District and lifestyle swing this 30–50% either way.
Visa policy, taxation, healthcare, and broadband infrastructure are national rather than city-level — the numbers below are Spain-wide context for someone weighing Valencia specifically. Each links through to the full country brief.
The Ajuntament de Barcelona announced in June 2024 that it would not renew any of the approximately 10,100 existing tourist-rental (HUT) licences in the city when they expire by 9 November 2028, effectively ending short-term holiday rentals within Barcelona. Regional bodies published implementing decisions through 2024-2025.
Who it affects: Owners of licensed tourist flats in Barcelona; long-term rental supply expected to rise.
From 1 July 2025 all operators of short-term rental accommodation (Airbnb, Booking, direct-bookings) must register with the national Registro Único de Alquileres and display the registry number in listings. Designed to enforce licensing compliance in major tourist cities. Related municipal moratoria (notably Barcelona's plan to eliminate tourist rental licences by 2028) continue separately.
Who it affects: Short-term rental hosts and tourist-accommodation operators.
The 2025 Reglamento introduced a new "arraigo de segunda oportunidad" path: third-country nationals who previously held legal residence for at least two years but lost it may regularise on demonstrating current Spanish ties and integration. The reform package is expected to regularise around 300,000 people per year over three years.
Who it affects: Former long-term residents who lost legal status; irregular residents who previously held status.
A one-bedroom apartment in central Valencia rents for around €950 per month. Combined monthly essentials (rent + utilities + groceries + transit) total approximately €1,360 EUR-equivalent. Individual spend varies 30–50% by district and lifestyle.
Is Valencia expensive compared to other global cities?
Valencia ranks 36th out of 100 cities Meridian tracks for combined monthly living costs — in the affordable half, and 2nd of 5 within Spain. Rankings use EUR-normalised rent + utilities + groceries + transit.
What's the weather like in Valencia?
Valencia sees average summer highs of 32°C in August and winter lows of 7°C in January. Annual rainfall totals about 484mm. Full monthly breakdown in the Climate section above.
What visa do I need to move to Valencia?
Valencia's visa regime is set at the national level — Spain tracks 4 residence-permit routes including Digital Nomad Visa (DNV), Highly Qualified Professional (HQP) residence permit, Startup / Entrepreneur Visa, among others. See the Spain country brief for full eligibility, salary thresholds, and processing times.
How do you get around in Valencia?
Valencia has 10 metro lines plus an extensive tram network; the city centre is highly walkable (Meridian editorial score 5/5); bike infrastructure is strong (4/5). Monthly transit pass cost is in the breakdown above.
What language is spoken in Valencia?
Spanish and Valencian (a variety of Catalan) official. English common in tech and digital-nomad communities.
What is the main airport for Valencia?
Valencia's primary international airport is VLC (Valencia Airport).